KhbarExpress www.khabarexpress.com
Welcome Guest Sign In New user! Sign Up Now | My Favourites (new)
UniqueIdea.net Softwares SMS Jokes Poems Story Time Pass Facts
Search Photo  
RSS 21 November 2009
Forum | Wallpapers | Photo Gallery | Business | Entertainment | Education | Sports | Article | City | Cartoon | Video News |
Free News on your website


Women authors cry foul over UK publishing magazine's 'sexist' selection of 2009's top 10 books
8 Nov 2009, 1132 Hrs

Add comment          Mail          Print          Write to Editor



PSAccounting

London, Nov.8 The British publishing world has been plunged into a new row over sexism after the authoritative Publishers Weekly omitted to include a single female author in its list of the year's top 10 titles.

Leading British women writers rounded on the respected industry magazine yesterday after its pick of 2009's must-read books failed to nominate some of the year's biggest literary successes, such as Hilary Mantel, whose Wolf Hall won the Man Booker Prize, or Alice Munro, who won its international equivalent.

The Independent quoted Lionel Shriver, the prize-winning author of We Need to Talk About Kevin, as saying that the selection was further evidence of the "weirdly retrograde sexual sensibility" that dominates publishing.

"Every time a list like this comes out it just helps to propagate the same attitudes," Shriver said, adding, "Publishing takes men more seriously than women. Female writing is regarded as second tier; there is a default assumption that men are the heavy hitters."

Louisa Ermelino, the novelist, journalist and the magazine's reviews director, said it had "disturbed us" that its list was all male, but insisted: "We ignored gender and genre and who had the buzz. We gave fair chance to the 'big' books of the year, but made them stand on their own two feet."

But authors were dismayed that Mantel had failed to make the grade.

Helen Dunmore, whose A Spell of Winter won the inaugural Orange Prize in 1996, said: "It does seem strange that it wouldn't include Wolf Hall, one of Mantel's finest books, and a hugely enjoyable one."

Claire Tomalin, the biographer, who is married to the novelist Michael Frayn, said: "It sounds like an eccentric list and it is a bit odd to exclude Hilary Mantel. In my pantheon, there are lots of very good female writers."

The novelist Kathy Lette added: "Apparently dinosaurs still roam the earth. They're all at Publishers Weekly. This list proves that the only support women authors get is from our Wonderbras. As women make up 90 per cent of the fiction-buying public, perhaps we should make a point and girl-cott male authors until our work is given the same critical acclaim and public backing." (ANI)




Discuss this story on KhabarExpress Forum  


Pelagian Dictionary

author
cry
foul
over
UK
publishing
magazin
sexist
selection
top
book


Comments to this News

Be the first to comment on this News


 
Post Your Comments to this News
 Posting Rules
 
  Name: Email:
 

Top Story of The Day
Latest Articles

22th National Sports competition held at Adarsh Vidhya Mandir, Ganagshahar

Katrina Kaif and Akshay Kumar in Movie De Dana Dan


Education Special

All right reserved by Khabarexpress.com
Contact Us | Archives | Sitemap | Can't see Hindi ?
Special Edition: Lakshchandi Mahayagya, Camel Festival 2007, Vartmaan Sahitya, Bikaner Udyog Craft Mela
Our Network rajb2b.com | khabarexpress.com | uniqueidea.net | PelagianDictionary.com | hindinotes.com
Developed & Designed by Pelagian Softwares